The respectable Locksmith is truly brave and courageous in 'The Lock Sessions'
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By Alex Dionisio
You might be tempted to call emcee Locksmithās new project, The Lock Sessions, an album because it is of that same type of caliber and quality, but from the start in the opener āBlack Hole,ā he states clearly that his new album is coming, so this Landmark Entertainment release that dropped on September 29 is more likely a mixtape, to Locksmith at least. And even if it is a mixtape, a ten track/thirty minute-long mixtape, itās a high standing one at that. The Richmond, California-raised rapper, who has taken turns as a producer, freestyler, member of duo Frontline, battler and collaborator throughout his career so far, is as daring, fired up and fierce here as heās ever been before, probably more so than at any previous point. After his first album, 2014ās A Thousand Cuts, he showed vast amounts of wisdom and maturity in Lofty Goals from 2015, and now, in The Lock Sessions, he takes aim at the wayward rap game of late, as he holds falloff rappers accountable for their music, taking these pseudo-rhymers and their huge company sponsors to the woodshed. Plus, there are other separately themed gems in the mix as well.
Much more than just a showcase of great vocal stamina and great rhymes, The Lock Sessions starts early and often with the urgent messages. The heavy-banging intro āBlack Holeā smashes dumbed down commercial/mainstream hip-hop with a series of wonderful, sledgehammering lines. Locksmith first states his declaration of independence (āI know the journey is bigger than me / I will not submit to this industry / I write my songs from a genuine placeā), then describes the current aboveground rap music industry (āthey manufacture an art with no soul / look in that face, itās a desolate hole / as long as Iām breathing Iāll keep making music, I cannot create under corporate controlā), follows that up by speaking on the typical fake rapper (āyouāre a slave to the playlist / all you do is make songs that are tasteless / for a label with a boss that is faceless, face it, [man] you a pawn you donāt say [ish]ā) and lastly gives an example (āif they ask you to sing, you gonā say, āwhat song?ā / looking for your bread, they gonā say, āmove alongāā).
More excellent wordplay and guest Mark Battles mark āEpic,ā where Lock is relentless and holds on to values and honor. āKoolioā reveals the tricky politics in the hood and in rap and exposes the truth and motives behind a lot of crooked modern day phenomena (ācorporations see us all as investments,ā āIām scorned if I speak outā). Locksmithās refrain is a promise ā āI aināt gonā sit and say what you wanna hear, Iāma just keep it cominā in front of here.ā Plowing and pummeling through without cease, Lock provides his most weighted line of āGrimeā when he comments on the scum of the game rapping, āthey just keep rapping ābout money and bottles and models and models and hollows and how they just copped a new yacht in the grotto but what is it worth if you shallow?ā Fred The Godson and Mally Stakz spit hard street bars in āNo Rules,ā and in āNo Manners,ā Locksmith details how the major music business treats vulnerable artists susceptible to manipulation and even seems to go after culturally retarding online publications⦠āthey gather the young and impressionable and pressure them through material sums they can profit from, every profit plummets at some point but at some point, [people] got to be responsible but their response is bull;ā āfrom these writers, makes it hard as an artist to get behind sites, like they forcefully force-feed with a forced fee and force greed instead of a subject matter with some substance rather.ā
All hardness and no heart? Not the case. Lock takes time to deal with his struggles with love in āNowhereā featuring One.Coco, and with David Correy he delivers his very own ode to mom with a new flip of āA Hard Knock Lifeā in the bumping lovely groove known as āGo There.ā Rebecca Nobel joins in on āMore Lessonsā with its great advice from Lock plus his closing shoutouts. The name-list is a little lengthy, but how often these days do you hear shoutouts? Itās some time just for him but considerate too and if Lock is not well connected, I donāt know what you would call it. With a variety of beats, hardcore rap and tons to say plus faultless features, The Lock Sessions is very likely Locksmithās riskiest project to date but also his most fruitful thus far. Few rappers dare to touch the topics Locksmith has so confidently and ambitiously gone head first into here. True enough, fans will not want to wait for his new upcoming studio album (Olive Branch), but they should be happy to, so that Lock is under no pressure to hurry or rush another potential masterpiece.